A new method based on thumbnail pressure has been developed to
monitor conditioned pain modulation (CPM). Patients, such as those with
fibromyalgia (FM) who require long-term and frequent assessment of pain
responses, should welcome the new, simpler test.
CPM is a model where a conditioning stimulus is used to influence a
test stimulus in the context of pain responses. In healthy people, the
application of a painful stimulus to one part of the body often reduces
pain experienced in another part of the body. For patients with FM, or
those with other chronic pain disorders, this process is often impaired.
Inefficient CPM also is associated with increased use of pain
management strategies, such as analgesic use.
In the study “A novel paradigm to evaluate conditioned pain modulation in fibromyalgia,” published in the Journal of Pain Research, researchers
developed a new method to evaluate CPM that “can be performed
longitudinally in nearly any setting with minimal participant burden.”
A standard test for CPM involves the application of two painful
stimulus including pinching, pressure, or exposure to hot or cold
temperatures. The new paradigm for CPM uses pressure applied to the
dominant thumbnail (conditioning) for 60 seconds. Then pressure is
applied to the non-dominant (test) thumbnail and pain is rated on a
scale of 0-100, with 100 describing the most severe pain. This is the
first model where the same stimulus is used in both conditioning and
testing settings.
The researchers enrolled 16 right-handed female FM patients between
the ages of 24 and 57. To be eligible, these women had a clinical pain
score of greater than 40 on a 100-point scale (0=no pain, 100=worst
pain). As a control group, 14 age-matched healthy females also were
enrolled.
The researchers compared their model with an established alternative.
In all cases, thumbnail pressure was used as the test stimulus. As
conditioning stimulus, study participants were exposed to either cold
water or thumbnail pressure. The difference in pain rating of the test
stimulus applied before and during the conditioning stimulus was used to
evaluate if CPM was intact or impaired.
Results from this study suggest that “using pressure pain as both a
conditioning and test stimulus can identify intact CPM in healthy
subjects, as well as attenuated CPM in FM patients.”
In healthy controls, intact CPM was identified by a significant
decrease in the means of test stimulus pain ratings during both
thumbnail pressure pain conditioning, as well as cold-water
conditioning. In contrast, there were no significant changes in the
pain ratings of test stimulus before or after the conditioning stimulus
in FM patients.
Within each group (healthy and FM patients), there were no
significant differences between the two conditioning stimuli assessed,
suggesting that “pressure pain conditioning stimulation applied to the
thumbnail is at least as effective as cold water immersion of the hand
for inducing CPM,” the study found.
This study assessed only a small sample size, and not every healthy
female showed intact CPM. Likewise, not every FM patient displayed
impaired CPM. Additional studies evaluating more patients, while also
taking into consideration additional psychosocial factors and the use of
medications by FM patients, are necessary.
Nonetheless, the authors concluded the study “demonstrates that
thumbnail pressure can be used as both a test and conditioning stimulus
in the assessment of CPM. This study further confirms previous findings
of attenuated CPM in FM patients compared with healthy controls.”
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